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We ask you only once a year: please help us today. We’re an independent, non-profit website that the entire world depends on. We protect reader privacy. We never sell ads. But we still need to pay for servers and staff. If everyone chips in $25, we can keep this going for free. For the price of a book, we can share that book online forever. When I started this, people called me crazy. Collect web pages? Why? Who’d want to read a book on a screen?I founded this as a nonprofit so together we could build a special place to read, learn and explore. We lend three e-books per minute and answer a thousand of your questions per month. If you find our site useful, please chip in today. Thank you. —Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive

We ask you only once a year: please help us today. We’re an independent, non-profit website that the entire world depends on. We protect reader privacy. We never sell ads. But we still need to pay for servers and staff. If everyone chips in $25, we can keep this going for free. For the price of a book, we can share that book online forever. When I started this, people called me crazy. Collect web pages? Why? Who’d want to read a book on a screen?I founded this as a nonprofit so together we could build a special place to read, learn and explore. We lend three e-books per minute and answer a thousand of your questions per month. If you find our site useful, please chip in today. Thank you. —Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive

We ask you only once a year: please help Open Library today. We’re an independent, non-profit website that the entire world depends on. We never sell ads, but still need to pay for servers and staff. If everyone chips in $25, we can keep this going for free. For the price of a book, we can share that book online forever. When I started this, people called me crazy. Who’d want to read a book on a screen?I founded this as a nonprofit so together we could build a special place to read, learn and explore. If you find our site useful, please chip in today. Thank you. —Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive

The big house in a small townprisons, communities, and economics in rural AmericaEric J. Williams

About the Book

This work is an examination of how prisons impact rural communities, including a revealing study of two rural communities that have chosen prisons as an economic development strategy. The prison boom of the 1980s and 1990s, combined with the recent economic decline, has led to an interesting phenomenon: where towns once fought against becoming the home of a prison, they now fight to land one, even maximum security prisons. Some towns have put together lobbying packages, such as land, utility upgrades, and even cash, to convince corrections departments to build prisons on their land. A recent study by the Urban Institute estimates that one-third of all counties in the United States house a prison, and that our prison and jail population is now over 2.1 million. Another report indicates that more than 97 percent of all U.S. prisoners are eventually released, and communities are absorbing nearly 650,000 formerly incarcerated individuals each year. These figures are particularly alarming considering the fact that rural communities are using prisons as economic development vehicles without fully understanding the effects of these jails on the area. This book is the result of the author's ground-level research about the effects of prisons upon two rural American communities that lobbied to host maximum security prisons. Through hundreds of interviews conducted while living in Florence, Colorado, and Beeville, Texas, he offers the perspective of local residents on all sides of the issue, as well as a social history told mainly from the standpoint of those who lobbied for the prisons.